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         Henley William Ernest:     more books (17)
  1. Poems
  2. Biography - Henley, William Ernest (1849-1903): An article from: Contemporary Authors Online by Gale Reference Team, 2005-01-01
  3. Essays--fielding
  4. Things seen; impressions of men, cities, and books by G. W. (George Warrington) Steevens 1869-1900 Street G. S. (George Slythe) 1867-1936 Henley William Ernest 1849-1903, 1900-12-31
  5. Lyra heroica; a book of verse for boys by William Ernest Henley 1849-1903, 1891-12-31
  6. Poems by William Ernest Henley. by Henley. William Ernest. 1849-1903., 1898-01-01
  7. Print On Demand Facsimile of Original:A book of verses by William Ernest Henley. by Henley. William Ernest. 1849-1903., 1905-01-01
  8. Hawthorn and lavender. with other verses by William Ernest Henle by Henley. William Ernest. 1849-1903., 1910-01-01
  9. A Late Lark. Part-song for S. A. T. B. Words by William Ernest Henley (1849-1903) (Choral Library) by Jonathan Thomas Horne, 1959
  10. For England's sake, verses and songs in time of war by William Ernest, 1849-1903 Henley, 2009-10-26
  11. Three plays. by W.E. Henley and R.L. Stevenson. Deacon Brodie. B by Henley. William Ernest. 1849-1903., 1892-01-01
  12. English lyrics. Chaucer to Poe. 1340-1849. selected and arranged by Henley. William Ernest. 1849-1903., 1897-01-01
  13. A book of English prose. character and incident 1387-1649. selec by Henley. William Ernest. 1849-1903., 1894-01-01
  14. William Ernest Henley, by Joseph M. Flora, 1970-01

81. World Greatest Classic Authors - Biographies
1925) Hardy, Thomas (1840 1928) Hawthorne, Nathaniel (1804 - 1864) Hemans, FeliciaDorthea (1793 - 1835) Henley, William Ernest (1849 - 1903) Herodotus (-484
http://michaelroth.tripod.com/authors.htm

[a]
[b] [c] [d] ... [z]
A
Adams, Henry Brook (1838 - 1918)
Aeschines (-290 - -314)

Aeschylus (-524 - -455)

Aesop (0 - 0)
...
Austen, Jane (1775 - 1817)
B
Bacon, Sir Francis (1561 - 1626)
Barrie, Sir James Matthew (1860 - 1937)

Bastiat, Claude-Frederic (1801 - 1850)

Baum, Lyman Frank (1856 - 1919)
...
Byron, Lord George Gordon Noel (1788 -1824)
C
Carroll, Lewis (1832 - 1898)
Cather, Willa Silbert (1873 - 1947)
Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de (1547 - 1616) Chaucer, Geoffrey (1343 - 1400) ... Crane, Stephen ( 1871 - 1900)
D
Dana, Richard Henry ( 1815 - 1882) Dante, Alighieri ( 1265 - 1321) Darwin, Charles Robert (1809 - 1882) Defoe, Daniel (1660 - 1731) ... Dumas, Alexandre père (1802 - 1870)
E
Eliot, George (1819 - 1880) Eliot, Thomas Stearns (1888 - 1965) Emerson, Ralph Waldo (1803 - 1882) Epictetus (55 - 135) ... Euripides (-480 - -406)
F
Fielding, Henry ( 1707 - 1754) Firdawsi (940 - 1020) Flaubert, Gustave (1821 - 1880) Foss, Sam Walter (1858 - 1911) ... Frost, Robert Lee (1874 - 1963)
G
Galen (130 - 199) Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von (1749 - 1832) Grahame, Kenneth (1859 - 1932) Gray, Thomas (1716 - 1771) ... Grimm, Jacob and Wilhelm (1785 - 1763)
H
Haggard, H. Rider (1856 - 1925)

82. HENLEY, William Ernest
Henley, William Ernest. William Ernest Henley was a prolific English poet andjournalist who encouraged and supported many of his contemporaries.
http://michaelroth.tripod.com/bio087.htm
HENLEY, William Ernest
Born: August 23, 1849 in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England Died: June 11, 1903 in Woking, near London, England William Ernest Henley was a prolific English poet and journalist who encouraged and supported many of his contemporaries. He was the oldest of five sons born to a Gloucester book seller, William Henley, and Emma Morgan Henley. He suffered from asthma, tuberculosis and osteomyelitis and, as a child, had one foot amputated. He attended the Crypt School where he was influenced by poet and teacher Thomas Edward Brown. Although he had plans to attend Oxford, the death of his father meant that he couldn't afford the tuition. He spent 1873 and 1874 in an Edinburgh hospital. Under the care of an innovative surgeon, Joseph Lister, his second foot was saved from amputation. During these years, he read voluminous numbers of books and learned French, Spanish and Italian. He fell in love with Anna Boyle, the sister of another patient, and married her in April 1878. They had one daughter who died at age six. In his collection of poems

83. Biography.com
Henley, Ernest M. (Mark), 1924 . Henley, William Ernest, 1849 1903. Henne,Frances E. (Elizabeth), 1906 1985. Hennebique, François, 1842 1921.
http://search.biography.com/bio_browse.pl?letter=H&num=650

84. Poetry Of The Sea - O Falmouth Is A Fine Town
O Falmouth Is a Fine Town by William Ernest. Henley, This is intriguing. WilliamErnest Henley (18491903) was a well-known poet, editor and critic.
http://theworld.com/~dduncan/poetry/falmouth.html
RETURN to Index
O Falmouth Is a Fine Town
by William E[rnest]. Henley
This is intriguing. William Ernest Henley (1849-1903) was a well-known poet, editor and critic. His best-known poem, at least to recent generations of American high-schoolers, is "Invictus". Therefore it's odd to find one of his poems which is also a folk-song "Ambletown", aka "Home, Dearie, Home" (although the name of the town is changed, and the sailor learns he is with child by letter).
In fact, this was written in an Edinborough hospital in 1878 (published in Henley's "Book of Verses", 1888, and probably independently at an earlier date), and it was noted that "the burthen and the third stanza are old." These apparently are derived from either one of the versions of the song identified by Laws as "Rosemary Lane" (K 43) or a common ancestor. [For texts and tunes to several of these, search The Digital Tradition for (DT)"#319" or (Laws)"K43".]

85. Encyclopædia Britannica
sociologist, and historian. Henley, William Ernest (1849–1903)British poet, critic, and editor. naturalistic fallacy Fallacy
http://search.britannica.com/search?query=Herbert G. Wells&ct=gen1&fuzzy=N

86. Encyclopædia Britannica
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia, Henley, William Ernest (1849–1903) British poet,critic, and editor. Cox, James M(iddleton) (1870–1957) US politician.
http://search.britannica.com/search?query=James M. Barrie&ct=gen1&fuzzy=N

87. HENLEY, JOHN
Henley, William Ernest (1849—1903), British poet, critic and editor, was born onthe 23rd of August 1849 at Gloucester, and was educated at the Crypt Grammar
http://76.1911encyclopedia.org/H/HE/HENLEY_JOHN.htm
document.write("");
HENLEY, JOHN
Preacher at once and zany of his age.” Henley is the subject of several of Hogarth’s prints. His life, professedly written by A. Welstede, but in all probability by himself, was inserted by him in his Oratory Dransactions. See J. B. Nichols, History of Le-icestershire; I. Disraeli, Calamities of Authors.

88. William Ernest Henley
William Ernest Henley (1849 1903). Double Ballade on the Nothingnessof Things. The big teetotum twirls, And epochs wax and wane
http://nightshade.homepage.dk/Henley.htm
Home Up Me In Memoriam ... Philosophy
William Ernest Henley (1849 - 1903)
Double Ballade on the Nothingness of Things
The big teetotum twirls,
And epochs wax and wane
As chance subsides or swirls;
But of the loss and gain
The sum is always plain.
Read on the mighty pall,
The weed of funeral
That covers praise and blame,
The -isms and the -anities,
Magnificence and shame:
"O Vanity of Vanities!" The Fates are subtle girls! They give us chaff for grain. And Time, the Thunderer, hurls, Like bolted death, disdain At all that heart and brain Conceive, or great or small, Upon this earthly ball. Would you be knight and dame? Or woo the sweet humanities? Or illustrate a name? O Vanity of Vanities! We sound the sea for pearls, Or drown them in a drain; We flute it with the merles, Or tug and sweat and strain; We grovel, or we reign; We saunter, or we brawl; We search the stars for Fame, Or sink her subterranities; The legend's still the same: "O Vanity of Vanities!" Here at the wine one birls, There some one clanks a chain.

89. Holly Smith | Disability And Russia |The Whaleship Essex
presumably, FDR's). It's William Ernest Henley (1849 1903), who,interestingly enough, wrote it when he was in hospital. He had
http://www.ralphmag.org/BR/letters.html
Holly A. Smith,
Disability and Russia, and
The Whaleship Essex
RALPH: I want you to know that this is the most beautiful review thus far. It matches (finally) the passion of the book and all I could keep saying was "Thank god, someone has really gotten what the book is about!!!" I loooooove it and you have warmed my heart immensely. - Thank you.
Holly Smith
hsmss@co.boulder.co.us>

Go to the review in question

Dear Mr. Gallagher: Thank you for sending us the article on " Disability and Russia " which has been posted in this issue of RALPH. I hope this letter reaches you before they consign you to the gulag. Your speech was great. I only wish you had space to recount the story of Senator Margaret Chase Smith, the self- appointed keeper of the sanctity of the Senate Office Building Parking Garage, who used to skulk about, hide behind pillars so she could chase you out, forbid your parking there - even though you worked for a fellow Senator. And, of course, the then young Robert Kennedy, who you described as shyly setting down his diet Coke before he pulled you and your wheelchair up the curb. However, in your Tennyson quote, you got it wrong.

90. The Victorian Sonnet
18451907); Field, Michael ; Alice Meynell (1847-1922); William ErnestHenley (1849-1903); Edmund W. Gosse (1849-1928); Edward Cracroft
http://www.sonnets.org/victoria.htm
The Victorian Sonnet
Much poetry of the Victorian period is no longer very highly esteemed, for reasons that seem apparent after reading a number of sonnetsa sentimental self-indulgence and what F. R. Leavis called an "inferiority, in rigour and force, of intellectual content." Yet, when looked at individually, the poems are often graceful and moving, and their worst, most conventional excesses seem no more ridiculous than the stock courtly love sequences of the 16th and 17th centuries. Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861), who wrote Sonnets from the Portuguese to her husband ( Robert Browning (1812-1889)), is probably the most genuinely popular (and critically maligned) sonneteer of this period. Other British Victorian writers included here are Thomas Hood Charles Tennyson Turner (1808-1879), and his more famous brother, Alfred, Lord Tennyson Matthew Arnold (1822-1888), best known for "Dover Beach," wrote several sonnets. George Meredith (1828-1909) wrote a lengthy sequence, Modern Love , about the ruin of his marriage. Although the sequence consisted of rhymed sixteen-line iambic pentameter poems, ever since the poet and critic Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837-1909) praised these poems as sonnets (and Meredith used the term himself in Sonnet 30 ), they have been widely accepted as specimens of the form. In addition to Meredith and Swinburne, the late 19th century

91. J. M. Dent And Sons: Author Files Abstract
Hadfield, Miles. Hartley, LP (Leslie Poles), 18951972. Henley, WilliamErnest, 1849-1903. Hogarth, CJ Hogg, Garry. Hopkins, Kenneth.
http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/j/J.M.Dent_and_Sons/authab.htm
Author Files Abstract:
NOTE: Files are incomplete, since many items of significant commercial value were sold piecemeal in the 1980s and some files from later years are held by Weidenfeld and Nicholson, which took over the Dent firm in 1986.
Return to J. M. Dent and Sons Table of Contents

92. Slang And Its Analogues Past And Present. (in MARION)
only, 18901904. Subject Slang. Material 7 v. 23 cm. Note Vol. 2-7Comp. and ed. by John S. Farmer and WE Henley. Vol. 1 printed
http://vax.vmi.edu/MARION/AAX-6712
Slang and its analogues past and present.
Title:
Author:
Published:
  • [London] Printed for subscribers only, 1890-1904.
Subject:
Material:
  • 7 v. 23 cm.
Note:
  • Vol. 2-7: Comp. and ed. by John S. Farmer and W. E. Henley.
  • Vol. 1 printed by T. Poulter and sons; v. 2-3 by Harrison and sons; v. 7 by Neill and co., ltd., Edinburgh.
System ID no:
  • AAX-6712
Holdings:
LOCATION: REF CALL NUMBER: PE3721 .F4
    • v.1 c.1 Not Checked Out/Non-Re
    • v.2 c.1 Not Checked Out/Non-Re
    • v.3 c.1 Not Checked Out/Non-Re
    • v.4 c.1 Not Checked Out/Non-Re
    • v.5 c.1 Not Checked Out/Non-Re
  • 93. Poetry
    DH Lawrence (1885 1930). Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809 - 1892). William ErnestHenley (1849 - 1903). WH Auden (1907 - 1973). John Clare (1793 - 1864).
    http://nightshade.homepage.dk/Poetry.htm
    Home Me In Memoriam Links ... Philosophy [ Poetry ] This is my very incomplete attempt to bring to you the best examples of poetry available, for your possible enjoyment. Luckily everyone has separate tastes. Edna St. Vincent Millay (1892 - 1950) John Donne (1572 - 1631) Dorothy Parker (1893 - 1967) Edward Thomas (1878 - 1917) ... Amy Lowell (1874 - 1925)

    94. Thrale.com: Double Ballad Of Life And Fate
    Pay your footing on the nail Fate's a fiddler, Life's a dance. WilliamErnest Henley 1849 1903. Page updated 23 January, 2003 Jump to
    http://www.thrale.com/history/english/hester_and_henry/henleys_poem.php
    Thrale .com Anything and everything Thrale or Thrall Home Family history English Hester and Henry Thrale /* CSS Menu highlight- By Marc Boussard (marc.boussard@syntegra.fr) Modified by DD for NS4 compatibility Visit http://www.dynamicdrive.com for this script */ var ns4class='' What's new Newsletter Family history Coat of arms ... Our travelog Tools FAQs Forum E-mail us Site map ... Advanced search Printer friendly page Email this to a friend
    Double ballade of life and fate
    This ballad by - aside from being a well written pleasing read - makes reference to Hester Thrale's close relationship with Samuel Johnson. Fools may pine, and sots may swill,
    Cynics gibe, and prophets rail,
    Moralists may scourge and drill,
    Preachers prose, and fainthearts quail.
    Let them whine, or threat, or wail!
    Till the touch of Circumstance
    Down to darkness sink the scale

    95. Oscar Wilde Collection

    http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/research/fa/wilde.html
    Oscar Wilde, 1854-1900
    Collection, 1851-1957 (bulk 1877-1957)
    3 boxes (1.26 linear feet) Acquisition: Purchases and gifts, 1959-1975
    Access: Open for research
    Processed by: Chelsea Dinsmore, 2002
    RLIN Record ID:
    Table of Contents
    Biographical Sketch
    Scope and Contents

    Folder List

    Index of Correspondents
    ...
    Index of Third-Party Works
    Biographical Sketch
    Oscar Fingal O'Flaherty Wills Wilde, born in 1854 in Dublin, Ireland, was the second son of Sir William Robert and Lady Jane Francesca Wilde. At the age of ten, Wilde entered the well-known Portora Royal School, where he excelled in Greek studies. His interest in Greek continued at Trinity College, Dublin, where John Mahaffy, an eminent Greek scholar who later took Wilde on a tour of Italy, was his tutor. Wilde was awarded a scholarship in classics from Magdalene College, Oxford, which he entered in 1874. During his fourth year at Oxford, Wilde won the prestigious Newdigate Prize for imitative poetry with a verse praising Ravenna, a city he had visited with Mahaffy and the burial site of Dante. In addition to his studies, Wilde began to develop his role as poseur and aesthete. Wilde received his BA in 1878 and, after an additional year at Oxford, went to London where he began writing. In 1880 Wilde published Vera; or, The Nihilists, and in 1881 he was hired by Richard D'Oyly Carte to boost Gilbert and Sullivan's new opera Patience in America by means of a lecture tour. Dressed in black velvet and a full length fur coat, he spoke on the new aestheticism from New York to San Francisco. He met with Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Louisa May Alcott, Walt Whitman, and Jefferson Davies, among others.

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